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Label:Shortly after the Muslims of North Africa introduced the art of making twisted-pile carpets into Spain, the weaving of this armorial carpet was undertaken. It was probably made for the founder of the royal house of Castile, Fadrique Enríquez, who held the titles of Lord of Medina and Admiral of Castile and was the grandfather of King Ferdinand of Spain. His coat of arms—an upright lion beneath two triple-towered castles bordered by anchors and ropes—is repeated three times in the center field. A decorative pattern in the main border at each end, formed by designs that resemble Arabic script, indicates its Mudéjar workmanship.

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Philadelphia Museum of Art Handbook (2014 Edition)

North African Muslims introduced the craft of carpet weaving to Spain, where it became an important industry in the twelfth century. This “admiral” carpet—so called because it bears the arms of Don Fadrique Enriquez de Mendoza, twenty-sixth admiral of Castile—belongs to a famous group of rugs donated by Don Fadrique’s family to the convent of Santa Clara in Palencia. In this beautifully preserved carpet, shields with the Enriquez family arms stand out against the patterned background, which is framed by playful images of animals, women in wide skirts, and mythical wild men. A design in the top and bottom borders resembles Arabic script, indicating the rug’s Mudejar workmanship. Jack Hinton and Dean Walker, from Philadelphia Museum of Art: Handbook. Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2014, p. 94.

Philadelphia Museum of Art: Handbook of the Collections

It was the Muslims of North Africa who brought the craft of rug weaving to Spain, where it became an important industry in the twelfth century. This rug is one of the most distinctive early Spanish types: long narrow carpets with coats of arms woven into the design. It belongs to the famous group known as the admiral" carpets because they bear the arms of Don Fadrique Enríquez de Mendoza (c. 1390-1473), twenty-sixth admiral of Castille. The Enríquez family donated this and other "admiral" rugs to the convent of Santa Clara in Palencia, which had been founded by Don Fadrique's father and was to be the burial place of the admirals of Castille. In this well preserved carpet the shields with the Enríquez arms stand out clearly against the shimmering patterned background. The top and bottom borders show illegible Arabic script in the angular Kufic style. Delightful secondary elements are provided by the unexplained designs in the long side borders that include birds, bears, wildmen combating animals, and women wearing enormously wide skirts. Dean Walker, from Philadelphia Museum of Art: Handbook of the Collections (1995), p. 117.

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